Where application for reinsurance was made on Saturday, upon certain terms, which were declined, and other terms demanded, and on Monday these last-mentioned terms were accepted by the applicant, and assented to by the president, but the policy not made out, because Monday was a holiday, the agreement to issue the policy must be considered as legally binding.

The law of Massachusetts is that although insurance companies can make valid policies only when attested by the signatures of the president and secretary, yet they can make agreements to issue policies in a less formal mode.

By the common law, a promise for a valuable consideration to make a policy is not required to be in writing, and there is no statute in Massachusetts which is inconsistent with this doctrine.

Where the power of the president to make contracts for insurance is not denied in the answer, or made a point in issue in the court below, it is sufficient to bind the company if the other party shows that such had been the practice, and thereby an idea held out to the public that the president had such power.

It is not essential to the existence of a binding contract to make insurance, that a premium note should have been actually signed and delivered.

The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.

MR. JUSTICE CURTIS delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts, in a suit in equity, to compel the specific performance of a contract to make reinsurance on the ship Great Republic. The circuit court made a decree in favor of the complainants, and the respondents appealed.

It appears that the complainants, a corporation established in New York, having made insurance of the ship Great Republic to a large amount, authorized Charles W. Storey, at Boston, to apply for and obtain from either of the insurance companies there reinsurance to the extent of ten thousand dollars. Pursuant to this authority, on the 24th December, 1853, Mr. Storey made application to the president of the defendant

corporation for reinsurance, at the same time presenting a paper, partly written and partly printed, as embodying the terms of the application. The paper was as follows:

"Reinsurance is wanted by the Union Mutual Insurance Company, New York, for $10,000, on the ship Great Republic, from December 24, 1853, at noon, for six months ensuing."

"This policy is to be subject to such risks, valuations, and condition, including risk of premium note, as are or may be taken by the said Union Mutual Insurance Company, and payment of loss to be made at the same time. 3 percent."

"Binding, _____ _____, President"

"New York, December 24, 1853"

The president, after consultation with one of the directors of the company, declined to take the risk for a premium of three percent, but offered to take it for three and a half percent.

Mr. Storey replied that was more than he was authorized to give, and left the office. He immediately apprised his principals, by a telegraphic dispatch, that the risk could be taken for three and a half percent for six months, or six percent a year. The reply, on the same day, was, "Do it for six months, privilege of canceling if sold." This reply did not come to the hands of Mr. Storey until Monday, the 26th day of December, when he went to the office of the respondents and found there the president of the company, but not any other person, as the day was generally observed, by merchants, bankers, and insurers, as a holiday, Christmas having fallen on Sunday.

Mr. Storey informed the president he was willing to pay three and a half percent for the reinsurance described in the proposal, took a pen and altered the three percent to three and a half percent, by adding 1/2 to 3 on the paper, and it is admitted by the answer that the president thereupon assented to the terms contained in the paper, but informed Mr. Storey that no business was done at the office on that day, and that the next day he would attend to it. The president then took the paper and retained it.

To a special interrogatory contained in the bill, the defendants answer:

"That its president did assent to the terms and provisions in said paper, as the terms and provisions of a reinsurance to be completed and executed by this defendant, by the making and execution of a policy in due form, according to the requisitions of the laws of Massachusetts and the bylaws of this defendant, but they were not assented to as a present insurance. "

Upon these facts, we are of opinion there was an agreement to reinsure according to the terms contained in the proposal, concluded by and between Mr. Storey and the president at this interview on Monday the 26th of December. The paper contained every particular essential to a contract to make reinsurance. It ascertained the subject of insurance, the commencement and duration of the risk, the parties, the interest of the assured, and the premium; and for the special risks, the valuations, and conditions, it referred to the original contract of insurance made by the complainants, by reason of which they were seeking reinsurance.

On Saturday, the president had offered to contract in accordance with the paper, saving a difference of one-half percent on the premium.

It was argued that it could not be considered an acceptance, on Monday, of a continuing offer made on Saturday, because, when the complainants authorized Mr. Storey to give three and a half percent, they at the same time imposed a new condition by the words, "privilege of canceling if sold." But Mr. Storey testifies, and this is not denied by the answer or by any witness, that when he made the application on Saturday, and before the president had named the premium which he was willing to take, the president said he supposed that they would have to cancel the policy if the vessel should be sold within the time, and that he (Storey) assented thereto, and that at the interview on Monday, when this point was referred to, the president said the usage in Boston would settle it, and he would not put anything concerning it into the policy; and after some conversation concerning the usage, Mr. Storey agreed to take the policy without any mention of the privilege of cancellation. Under these circumstances, we do not perceive that the requirement of this privilege can be considered as at all varying, in the apprehension and meaning of the parties, the terms of the acceptance on Monday from the terms of the proposal on Saturday. But whether, under all the circumstances, this should be deemed to have been a continuing offer we do not think it necessary to determine, because on Monday either the president's offer of Saturday was accepted by Mr. Storey, and its acceptance made known to the president, or the proposal was renewed by Mr. Storey and accepted by the president. The fact that others chose to abstain from business on that day did not prevent these parties from contracting if they saw fit to do so, and when one of them either accepted a continuing offer or renewed a proposal which was accepted by the other, they made a binding contract. Nor do we think the allegation of the answer that the president informed

Mr. Storey that no business was done in the office that day, but the next day he would attend to it, can reasonably be interpreted to mean that he had not made or intended to make a contract for a policy. Their fair meaning is that though he had agreed to make the insurance, as the secretary and clerks were not there and the books not accessible, any action on the agreement must be deferred to the next day. The words cannot be understood to mean that he would on the next day attend to what he had already done; and he had already made a contract for reinsurance, to be executed on the next day by issuing a policy in due form to carry that agreement into effect.

On leaving the office of the defendants, Mr. Storey immediately informed the plaintiffs that he had effected this contract, and on the night of the same day the ship Great Republic was destroyed by fire while lying at a wharf in the City of New York. On the twenty-seventh of December, the complainants tendered their note for the agreed premium and demanded the policy of reinsurance. The defendants declined to make the policy. Several grounds have been insisted on in support of this refusal:

The first is that by force of a statute of the State of Massachusetts, Rev.Stats., ch. 37, secs. 12, 13, insurance corporations can make valid policies of insurance only by having them signed by the president and countersigned by the secretary. But we are of opinion that this statute only directs the formal mode of signing policies, and has no application to agreements to make insurance.

It is further insisted, that by the law merchant, insurance can be effected only by a contract in writing. We do not doubt that the commercial law of all countries has treated of insurance as made in writing by an instrument, denominated by us a policy, and there may be provisions of positive law in some countries requiring an agreement to make a policy to be in writing. But there is no such statute of frauds in the State of Massachusetts.

The common law must therefore determine the question, and under that law a promise for a valuable consideration to make a policy of insurance is no more required to be in writing

than a promise to execute and deliver a bond, or a bill of exchange, or a negotiable note. So it has been held by other courts, and we think on sound principles. 18 Barbour 69; Hamilton v. Lycoming Company, 5 Barr. 339. See also Sanford v. Trust Fire Ins. Co., 11 Paige 547.

The respondents' counsel had argued that their president had not authority to enter into an oral contract binding the company to make insurance. They admit it has been usual for the president to make such contracts, but they say that when he has done so, the policy was not issued until the next day, and no risk is understood to have commenced under such an undertaking until the policy issues. Whether a risk be commenced when the contract for insurance in made or only when the policy issues must depend on the terms of the contract. Where, as in the present case, there is an express contract to take the risk from a past day, there is no room for any understanding that it is not to commence until a future day. Such an understanding would be directly repugnant to the express terms of the contract. And if the defendants have held out their president as authorized to make oral contracts for insurance, no secret limitation of this authority would affect third persons, dealing with him in good faith and without notice of such limitation. Besides, the supposed limitation would be inconsistent with the authority itself. It is in effect that though the president is authorized to make oral promises to effect insurance, the company is at liberty to execute those promises or to refuse to do so, at its option.

The power of the president to enter into this contract to make insurance is nowhere denied in the answer. All that can bear on this subject occurs in certain statements concerning the usual course of business of the company. It seems to have been assumed by both parties that whatever the president actually did in this transaction, he did for the company and so as to render them responsible for his acts. And no question was raised on this point in the court below. Still it is incumbent on the complainants to offer competent and sufficient evidence of the authority of the president to bind the company, though less evidence may be reasonably sufficient when no issue concerning it is made on the record.

We think such evidence is in the case. Mr. Storey deposes that during the three years next preceding this transaction, he had effected upwards of three hundred contracts for reinsurance, with the presidents of ten different insurance companies of Boston, and that one or possibly two of these presidents usually signed an accepted application -- the others all contracted orally. Considering that all the incorporated insurance

companies in Boston have similar charters and the same kind of officers to conduct their business, we think this is competent evidence that presidents of such insurance companies in that city are generally held out to the public as having the authority to act in this manner. And upon a point not put in issue in the record, and on which no more than formal proof ought to be demanded, we hold this evidence sufficient. Fleckner v. Bank of the United States, 8 Wheat. 330; Minor v. Mechanics' Bank of Alexandria, 1 Pet. 46.

The fair inference is that if the general authority of the president to contract for the corporation had been put in issue, it could have been shown by the most plenary proof that the presidents of insurance companies in the City of Boston are generally held out to the public by those companies as their agents, empowered to receive and assent, either orally or in writing, to proposals for insurance and to bind their principals by such assent.

Nor do we deem it essential to the existence of a binding contract to make insurance that a premium note should have been actually signed and delivered. The promise of the plaintiffs to give a note for the premium was a sufficient consideration for the promise to make a policy. It is admitted that the usage is to deliver the note when the policy is handed to the assured. If the defendants had tendered the policy, we have no doubt an action for not delivering the premium note would have at once lain against the plaintiffs, and we think there was a mutual right on their part, after a tender of the note, to maintain an action for nondelivery of the policy. In Tayloe v. Mutual Fire Ins. Co., 9 How. 390, it was held that a bill in equity for the specific performance of a contract for a policy could be maintained. And it being admitted that in this case the defendants would be liable as for a total loss on the policy if issued in conformity with the contract, no further question remained to be tried, and it was proper to decree the payment of the money, which would have been payable on the policy if it had been issued.

The decree of the circuit court is affirmed.

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